Therapy With Bright Light May Help Depression Year-Round

Bright light therapy, a standard treatment for seasonal depression that’s triggered by dark days during the winter, may also help people who experience depression throughout the year.

In a new study, scientists examined data on a total of 858 adults with nonseasonal depression, taken from 11 clinical trials. Participants were randomly assigned to receive bright light therapy alone or combined with antidepressants, or assigned to control groups that received only medication, a placebo, or dim red light therapy.

Compared with participants who didn’t receive bright light therapy, those who did were more than twice as likely to report fewer depressive symptoms or to experience remission (a return to a normal level of social functioning), according to findings published October 2 in JAMA Psychiatry.

When researchers looked at treatments that lasted less than four weeks, people who received bright light therapy were three times more likely to experience symptom improvement or remission. For treatments lasting more than a month, symptom improvement or remission were twice as likely to occur with bright light therapy.

“Our findings suggest that a one-week duration of bright light treatment may be as effective as a six-week duration,” says the lead study author, Artur Menegaz de Almeida, of the Federal University of Mato Grosso in Brazil.